HCl, hydrochloric acid, is the primary standard used to titrate against potassium hydroxide.
A Titration is a producers which used to determine the concentration of an acid or base.
buret
A titrant, a titrate and an indicator (if needed).
14.1 mL is required to titrate 10.00 ml of 0.526 M H2SO4.
Since they are both acids, you don't usually titrate one against the other. If you want to titrate something, you should use one acid and one base. If one of them is a weak acid/base, the other should be a strong acid/base.So if you want to titrate a solution of acetic acid, use a solution of a known concentration of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) or potassium hydroxide (KOH) instead. You can also use either of those two strong bases to titrate a solution of perchloric acid.
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Titrate it with a standard base.
The chemical process for back titration is to titrate the analyte past the original end point/equivalence point, and then BACK titrate the excess titrant to equivalence.
"Assay", and "test" are potential synonyms for the word 'titrate'. The term is mainly used in the Chemistry to measure concentration of chemically active groups of substances such as acids and bases.
NaOH
I think because the asid is strong.